It's really up to film distribs and the films they make. Tropic Thunder will be R and it will do well. Only a few years ago there were a lot more R and Pg-13 films that should have been R and people really got sick of it. It put us smack in the middle as many of the pics were made for young teens and were way too raunchy for them. We play it if it's good and in demand. No Country For Old Men? Etc. Play good films and try to cover the spread.
Michael Hurley
Impresario

Mike, So what you are saying is no? The studios have more sway into where customers go to see movies? or......
Maybe I confused you.

We do very well with kid/family stuff vs selected peers (meaning we gross more). On the (15-25 year old targeted stuff-Iron Man, Hancock, Transformers) we do less than our peers. On "R" rated material even less.

There will always be pg-13 stuff targeted toward the 15-25 year olds. The amount of "R" stuff will flow up and down.

So...when there is nothing wide to play, and we have the choice between a lighter-PG-13 not as much taregted toward the 15-25 year olds vs a PG-13 or R rated targeted toward that demographic (which spends the most money)....can we grow that business?

So when Iron Man 2 comes, we can do better with that demographic? Maybe even get an "R"rated movie on the break and deserve it?

I think it's really a matter of how many screens you have. If you have only one screen, the occasional R picture will close one or two weeks to the largest demographic group of ticket buyers (the kids). Never running an R picture guarantees that nobody will expect you to (read: empty auditorium if you do).

We have 3 screens here, so I can promote a balanced clientele. An R can run on one or two screens, and I still have one to play a lower-rated picture on. In my mind, it's having more than one screen on-site that gives you the flexibility to run just about whatever you want.